Unquiet Desperation

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Category : Cleveland

Have I Mentioned That We Bought A House?

After a call from Earl Newton tonight, I realized that I might not have written about our move. To stem the confusion, here are the facts:

  • We bought a house.
  • It’s in Medina, OH, which is about forty-five minutes from where we currently live.
  • There is no job change for me involved.
  • My wife is taking a faculty position at the Music Settlement, where she will be teaching fiddle.
  • The kids are very excited.
  • The parents are also very excited.
  • We got it for an excellent price.
  • It’s in a wonderful neighborhood where the kids can walk to school.
  • Lots of mature trees.
  • I have a shed I will be transforming into an office.
  • We take possession on June 30th.
  • We move in on July 2.

I will post pictures as I’m able.

For Memorial Day, I went to the birthplace of Superman.

I drove to a neighborhood called Glenville on the east side of Cleveland.  There, at 10622 Kimberly Ave, is former home of one Jerry Siegel. It was in this house where he and his buddy Joe Shuster created on of the greatest icons in world culture.

This is the place where Superman was born.

Last year, author Brad Meltzer and a group of comic fans raised over $100,000 to renovate the birthplace of the most famous fictional character of the twentieth century. He pointed out, quite fairly, the City of Cleveland was letting the house rot, and that it was going to come down to the fans to save it.

And save it, they did.

Now, there’s a sign out front, and a plaque that tells you what you’re looking it.  But unless you knew to come here, you’d never know it existed.

The house is both inspirational and heartbreaking at the same time.  It’s wonderful that a bunch of people pitched in to raise money to save it. At the same time, the neighborhood is a mess. The vacant, boarded-up houses nearby are rotting; one had a sign to ward off looters: “NO COPPER. PVC PLUMBING ONLY.”

There are no fast food joints here. No large-chain gas stations. No Seven-Elevens. Hardly any business at all.

If there was ever a place that needed a hero, Glenville is it.

And yet, sitting there in my car, looking at the house, I was inspired. Two kids, two poor, frustrated, hormone-addled high-school kids created something wonderful there. That deserves some respect. That deserves some homage; some reverence.

Superman’s fame isn’t tawdy; it isn’t cheap. Unlike Batman, it isn’t born from angst and darkness. Superman is one of the most rare creations, he’s famous for being the Good Guy. There’s a purity to Superman that is utterly lacking in in most pop culture icons. It’s his signature, his staying power; it’s why people still look to this fictional character with hope.

These two kids took a man and gave him three things: 1) Morals, 2) Strength, and 3) Bulletproof Skin1.  That’s it. That was the formula. Hardly original. in fact, other parts of the Superman myth were cribbed entirely from other sources. Doc Savage, for instance, was known as the Man of Bronze and had a Fortress of Solitude. Superman was not created in a vacuum…he was a mashup of things that came before, and he is greater than the sum of his parts.

As a creative guy, this gives me hope. There is a myth of originality that creative folks cling to, as if there is anything new under the yellow sun. All we can do is remix and recast not only without shame, but also without guile.

And greatness? Superman achieved worldwide acclaim and recognition. The Siegel and Shuster families, however, have been fighting for the rights to Superman for years.

And the house in Glenville, where the two boys drew on old pieces of wallpaper, nearly passed away entirely.

The house serves as both inspiration and cautionary tale. It is both despair and hope, both dread and faith.

And between those, it endures.

Just like all of us.

(Click below to read the plaque)




  1. In the beginning, he couldn’t fly. He could only leap.[back]

I’m giving a talk at the May 12th meeting of the Cleveland Web Standards Meetup. Details:

Exploring Django Part One, or, I Made a Half-Monkey/Half-Pony To Please You

In this first part of a three-part talk, Evil Overlord Chris Miller will show all the budding Evil Masterminds who attend how to get started with the Python-based Django web application framework. Topics covered will include:

  1. URL Mapping for Fun and Profit,
  2. Templating Engines for the Faint of Heart, and
  3. Girding Thy Loins With The Power of Data Models.

Souls of the innocent will not be provided — expect to bring your own and some to share with the class.

Seating is limited to 30 people for this event, so register early!

The May10th meeting of Cleveland Python (Clepy) will be a Web Frameworks Shootout. This is an official Call For Presentations. If you want to present a framework let us know which one. Any and all frameworks are welcome. The rules:

The rules:

  •   You have at most 20 minutes for your presentation, including questions
  •   Code must be posted to BitBucket by May 3 to facilitate people following along during the presentation.
  •   You’ve got to stick to the project requirements, in the spirit of keeping this a fair comparison there should not be any additional graphics, styles or javascript tricks that are not built-in functionality of your framework.

The project:  A simple blog.

  •   Post list
  •   Post details page, including comments per post
  •   RSS feed of last 10 posts
  •   Ability to create a post, this should be protected by user authentication
  •   Ability to create comments, this should not be protected by authentication
  •   A blog post contains: title, contents, author and post date

A wiki page will be posted in the next couple of days on the Clepy site to answer some of the questions we’ve received.  You can learn more about us and subscribe to the mailing list at http://clepy.org.


Remember, Remember…

I’m fortunate to have friends to game with who are witty and intelligent. We get together as a group once a week and from the Olde Fartz when we fire up Steam and play Left 4 Dead or Half Life 2: Deathmatch.

This week’s missive from Kris Johnson calling us to arms was outstanding, and must be shared.

Did someone say “Gunpowder Plot”? That means no crossbows, no rocket launchers, no gravity guns, no crowbars and no alien derezzers. Guy Fawkes wouldn’t have any of it, gentlemen! But Guy blew it, and not in the way he intended. His little plot might have gone more to his liking if he’d added zero-point energy weapons and red-hot rebar to the mix. I, for one, refuse to limit myself to gunpowder in deference to a FAILURE, sirs! I will use every resource, be it of terrestrial origin or brought here by dimension-hopping freakshows, to blast your sorry faces to oblivion! Remember, remember, the fifth of November The Crossbow with Rebar so Hot I can think of no reason The Crossbow with Rebar Should ever be forgot. Shotgun, shotgun, I double-tap To separate your skull from cap. A rocket launched into your eye Across the screen your corpse does fly; my laser tripmine laid in wait To halt your dash and foul your gait. Holloa boys, holloa boys, WASD! Holloa boys, holloa boys, the winner, it’s me!